Joseph Rosa, director of UMMA, calls the grant a "dream come true" because it allows the museum to shift from an "oh, if we could" mentality to one of "now we can."

The money will be used to fund exhibitions, to pay for training, and to come up with new ways to collaborate with faculty and students on campus, so that art becomes a part of the students’ everyday culture:

"When they leave here with their degree," says Rosa, "they’ll probably move to a new city, join a gym; they should join the museum. Art should be the backdrop to the new life they’re leading, and that takes place when you make art accessible in new ways."

Rosa plans to hire an academic coordinator to act as a liaison between the museum and campus; someone to look for those who are inventive in their own field, and see how they could apply that to art:

"How can someone, say a scientist, who is looking at new technologies...be able to look at our collection of, say, African Art, and see things we haven’t seen before in its repetitive patterning of the modular form. Things like that."